Page 6 NATION Wednesday, October 4,! THE BATTALION Lennon’s killer denied parole, remains incarcerated ATTICA, N. Y. (AP) — State parole officials rejected a bid for freedom Tuesday for ex-Beatle John Lennon’s killer, saying Mark David Chapman had not lost his inter est in publicity, a drive that fueled his “most vicious and Violent act.” - It was Chapman’s first attempt for parole stemming Trom the December 1980 shooting death. Chapman will not be eligible for parole for two more years. Chapman was interviewed for 50 minutes Tuesday morning at a closed hearing at the maximum-security At tica state prison by three parole board members, said Tom Grant, a spokesman for the state Division of Parole. About four hours later, Chapman was given the board’s one-page determination beginning: “Parole is denied.” The board called Chapman’s killing of Lennon “calcu lated and unprovoked.” In addition to being one of the most famous musicians in the world, Lennon was also a “hus band and a father of two young children,” the board said. “Your most vicious and violent act was apparently fu eled by your need to be acknowledged,” the board said. “During your parole hearing, this panel noted your con tinued interest in maintaining your notoriety.” In a recent interview, Chapman said he believed that Lennon would have approved of his release. But the board concluded that releasing Chapman at this time would “deprecate the seriousness of the crime and serve to undermine respect for the law.” The parole board did note that Chapman has an “ex emplary disciplinary record” while in prison. But it added that because he has served his time in special protective housing, “you have been unable to avail yourself of anti violence and/or anti-aggression programming.” Chapman, 45, is serving 20 years to life in Attica. He pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in June 1981 for fatally shooting Lennon as the rock star and his wife, Yoko Ono, were entering their Manhattan apartment following a recording session. Ono had written a letter to the parole board about Chap man’s hearing. Her spokesman, Eliot Mintz, did not im mediately return telephone calls for comment Tuesday. State Sen. Michael F. Nozzolio, chainnan of the Senate Crime Victims, Crime and Correction Committee, had asked parole authorities to deny Chapman’s bid. “John Lennon represented a vision of hope, peace am love,” Nozzolio wrote to Parole Board Chairman Brie: Travis. ‘Tragically, his positive message and his life were!} tally ended by Mark David Chapman,” Nozzolio wrote, is the responsibility of the New York State Parole Board;; ensure that public safety is protected from the releasee; dangerous criminals like Mark David Chapman.” Parole board hearings with inmates are closed public. The Associated Press filed a Freedom of Info® tion Law request to get the board’s determination. ^ script of Tuesday’s interview with Chapman by the boar; will be available late in the week. Test-tube baby chosen to save sister MINNEAPOLIS (AP) —In the first known case of its kind, a Colorado couple created a test- (ube baby who was genetically screened and se lected in the hope he could save the life of his 6- year-old sister. The sister, Molly Nash, has a rare genetic dis ease, Fanconi anemia, that prevents her body from making bone marrow. But last week, doctors gave her an infusion of umbilical-cord blood from her newborn little brother, Adam, to try to correct the "disease. Screening laboratory-created embryos for genet ic diseases before implanting them in a woman is not new. But this is the first known instance in which par ents screened and selected an embryo in order to find a suitable tissue donor for an ailing sibling. Molly was just beginning to show signs of leukemia, which is frequently associated with the disease, when she had the transplant, said Dr. John Wagner, her physician at the University of Min nesota. The infusion procedure between siblings has a 90 percent success rate. “Molly’s doing very well,” Wagner said Tuesday, although she had a slight cold. She was playing on a computer, he said. Her parents, Jack and Lisa Nash of Englewood, Colo., wanted more children but were afraid to con ceive because both carry a faulty version of the Fan coni gene, meaning each child would have a 25 per cent chance of developing the disease. “We wanted a healthy child,” she told the Star Tri bune newspaper last month. “And it doesn't hurt him to save her life.” News in Brief Clinton declares disaster area MIAMI (AP) — President Clinton on Tuesday declared a major dis aster area exists in a nine-county area of Florida, which was hit last month by heavy rain from Tropical Storm Helene. The president issued the decla ration during a fund-raising trip to South Florida where a downpour from another storm grounded his plane, preventing him from at tending a fund-raiser for Democ ratic congressional candidates a! Jupiter Island, Fla. The federal aid can be used to repair or replace public buildings damaged by the tropical storm. 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